He then belittles Harris for taking out his anger on his former cadets out of convenience, rather than disciplinary purposes. A reformed Mauser defends Mahoney and confronts Harris for his actions. While Jones accepts his assignment, Mahoney complains that Harris gave them this work to express his dislike of them. When Captain Harris was tasked with investigating a string of crimes at the beach, he is also responsible for getting all the officers undercover assignments, to which Mahoney and Jones are assigned to be sanitation workers picking up litter. He also seems to take out his dislike of Mahoney through red tape rather than direct action.
#THIS IS THE POLICE 2 WIKI SERIES#
In the animated series Captain Harris is portrayed as gruff but not as sadistic as he was in the movies, and generally more competent. He works with Proctor in the fourth, fifth, and sixth films and the animated series. He even demonstrates trust in Tackleberry by requesting he be the one to shoot a locator bullet into the bad guy's car, notably calling him by his nickname "Tack" when doing so. Later, in the seventh movie, Harris and the rest of the team develop a 'peace' of sorts, with Harris joining them in the rescue attempt of Callahan and providing the team with the necessary equipment to track the criminals. The player controls Clint Edwards, a reporter. Though the sequel's story and characters are unrelated to the original, it still has the same mechanical gist, as first-person, puzzle-based Deep Web exploration. He heavily favors Blankes and Copeland and recruits them as squad leaders. Welcome to the Game II (stylized as Welcome II the Game) is a puzzle horror game developed by Reflect Studios and a sequel to Welcome to the Game. His initial dislike of Mahoney is based in part on his belief that he is disrupting the development of people, "who might make pretty good police officers". Although he is generally disliked by his colleagues because of his treatment of them, those same people end up rescuing him.ĭespite his role as antagonist, some scenes display Harris's genuine desire to see graduates become good cops. He derives pleasure from tormenting and belittling his subordinates - first the cadets he instructs at the academy, then Lassard's men whom he outranks. His catchphrase is: "Move it! Move it! Move it!" He is also deathly afraid of heights, as evidenced in an undercover stakeout in the sixth film, in which his and Proctor's covers are window washers for a high-rise office tower. Started as Lieutenant in the first film but is promoted to Captain in other films to come. He generally seems to be success-driven, at the cost of Lassard and his men. Starting with Police Academy 4 : Citizens On Patrol, he inherits Proctor from Mauser. Bailey in the films and voiced by Len Carlson in the cartoon), "Mister Nasty" of the police academy, he always attempts to discredit Lassard and his men, but ends up being the butt of most of the jokes.